Thursday, May 14, 2015

’the Juggernaut of Comintern’

The Red Army’s offensives of 1943–5 sustained a masterly
drum-beat that kept the Wehrmacht constantly reeling. They began in the middle
of the Baltic States, Byelorussia, and Ukraine and ended with the siege of
Berlin. They were organized in a series of huge forward leaps, in which
colossal concentrations of men and material would be massed in front of the
Germans’ over-stretched lines, then unleashed in an irresistible flood. The
second such offensive, after Kursk, was aimed at the Dnieper, which was
defended by the Germans with a wide zone of scorched earth. The third, launched
in January 1944, was aimed at the distant Vistula. The fourth, beginning in
August 1944, turned south into the Balkans and was aimed at the Danube. The
fifth, in January 1945, was aimed at the Oder and beyond.

In each of these movements, the basic tactic was to surround
and to envelop the points of resistance. Once a defensive fortress was cut off
and isolated, it could safely be left for destruction at a later date. In this
way, several German armies were cut off in Courland and left undefeated till
the end of the war. Major German fortresses in the East, such as Breslau, were
still intact when Berlin fell. The main thing was to prevent the Wehrmacht from
preparing a counter-blow, and hence to harry, to harass, and to maul. The
Russians knew war on the steppes: aggression usually paid off, fixed defence
could usually be outflanked. As the Plain narrowed, the Wehrmacht’s temptation
to stand and fight grew stronger. Three such choke-points occurred at the Dukla
Pass in the Carpathians, in the battle for Budapest, and at the line of the
Pomeranian Wall. Here Soviet and German blood was spilled in profusion.

The reputation of the Red Army—renamed the Soviet Army in
1944—went before it. Given the memories of 1939–41, it was often regarded as an
alien force even in the Soviet Union. In the Balkans, it was received at best
with mixed feelings. In Germany, where the troopers were encouraged to murder
and rape, it provoked panic. The first German village to be freed from the
Nazis was martyred. Pictures of German women crucified on barn doors were
circulated by the Nazis to stiffen resistance. Instead, in the winter of
1944–5, the mass of the German population took flight.

The Soviet drive into central Europe was one of the grandest
and most terrible military operations of modern history. One of the soldiers in
its ranks, who was himself arrested at the front, wrote of ’the Juggernaut of
Comintern’ crushing all beneath its wheels. For, if the Soviet Army brought
liberation from the hated Nazis, it also brought subjugation to Stalinism. With
it came looting, rape, common violence, and official terror on a horrific
scale. For those who saw it, it was an unforgettable sight. As the battered
German formations pulled back, wave after wave of liberators passed through.
First came the front-line troops, alert, well-clothed, heavily armed. Next came
the second-class units and punishment battalions, who marched with ammunition
but no food. Behind them the flotsam of the front—stragglers, camp followers,
walking wounded, refugees trapped between the lines. At the back rolled the
cordon of the NKVD in their smart uniforms and American jeeps, shooting all who
failed to keep going. Finally there came ‘the hordes of Asia’, the endless
supply columns riding on anything that would move westwards—broken-down trucks,
hijacked peasant carts, ponies, even camels. The contrast between the red-eyed,
bandaged, and weary German soldiery and the endless truck-loads of fresh-faced
Slavonic and Asiatic lads told its own story. The Soviet advance into the
Balkans in August 1944 had important political consequences. Romania changed
sides, and took the field against her erstwhile Nazi patrons; Hungary was
occupied by the German army to prevent Budapest from following Bucharest’s
example. In Bulgaria, the royal government was toppled in September. In Yugoslavia,
Tito’s partisans joined up with Soviet troops and freed Belgrade in October. In
Greece and Albania, both of which lay beyond the line of Soviet occupation, the
communist underground made preparations to take over. At which point, in
December, the Soviets ran into the obstinate defence of Budapest; and the
advance came to a halt until the New Year.

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About Me

Mitch Williamson is a technical writer with an
interest in military and naval affairs. He has published articles in
Cross & Cockade International and Wartime magazines. He was
research associate for the Bio-history Cross in the Sky, a book about
Charles 'Moth' Eaton's career, in collaboration with the flier's son,
Dr Charles S. Eaton. He also assisted in picture research for John
Burton's Fortnight of Infamy.
Mitch is now publishing on the WWW various specialist websites combined
with custom website design work.